PDA

View Full Version : Spike in suicides for Army National Guard, Reserve


SouthernDZ
01-19-2011, 15:55
We've been receiving forensic data on the reasons for suicides among military personnel since 2003. Relationships is a distant first; occupational (financial, conflicts with peers/leaders, UCMJ, etc.) was a distant second.

There's also a great deal of data regarding the impact of cohesion, cited as a major reason for lower instances of behavioral health problems among SOF. BH cites lack of cohesion as a major reason for increased instances among Reserves/NG. Reasons listed were falling in on units shortly before deployments (insufficient time to build cohesion pre-deployment) and loss of cohesion post-deployment (thanks for your service, good luck at GM).

Not surprised by this article released today.


Jan 19, 11:16 AM EST

Spike in suicides for Army National Guard, Reserve
By PAULINE JELINEK
Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Suicides among active duty soldiers dropped slightly in 2010 after five years of record increases, Army leaders said Wednesday.
But there were twice as many self-inflicted deaths last year than the year before among the Army National Guard and Reserve, the nation's "citizen soldiers."

The big increase in suicides for members of the Guard and Reserve involved soldiers who were not on active duty at the time.

The number of active duty suicides declined in all services except for the Air Force last year.
"The bottom line is, this is a significant issue," the Army's vice chief of staff, Gen. Peter Chiarelli, told reporters at the Pentagon. He said the Army remains committed to improving access to training, health care and other resources.

Chiarelli said the Army must continue to educate soldiers about the overuse and abuse of prescription drugs.

Lt. Gen. Jack Stultz, chief of the Army Reserve, said reservists are spread out geographically, often living in one state and belonging to a unit in another state, and that presents a major challenge.
He said leaders are looking for more ways for commanders to keep in contact with the members of their Reserve units during the bulk of the month, when they are not gathering for their training exercises.

Maj. Gen. Raymond Carpenter, acting director of the Army National Guard, said for his soldiers it is a "young white male problem," that does not appear to be linked to war deployments or lack of jobs. Instead, he said, about half the cases of Guard soldiers' suicides involved people who had some type of relationship problem with a spouse or partner.

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_MILITARY_SUICIDES?SITE=FLTAM&SECTION=US

frostfire
01-20-2011, 08:23
Based on what I've seen and heard first hand here, I'd say the trend is the same in AD. If nothing else, attempts and ideation
:(

RC-Cola
01-20-2011, 08:39
As a Ntl' Guard Soldier myself, I think the issue is coming back and just being thrown into society. So when Natl'Guard troops come home, they are not living on any Army Installation, they do not have Soldiers as Neighbors and many of the people they deployed with and grew close to can be hours away from where they live. The issue, I think, is that Soldiers go from being in Iraq/Afghanistan for 12 months to being thrown right back into Civillian life. As many know, it's not the same talking with people who didn't go through such experiences with you and a sense of being alone creeps in.

Oh yeah and they have "reintigration drills".. which is once a weekend for 6 months I believe. Seems like there is a huge gap in being able to adjust to being at home again.

RC